Posted
by
BeauHDon Friday February 23, 2018 @07:20PM
from the false-alarm dept.

Since October 2017, Apple has made around 1,600 false alarm 911 calls from a distribution site in Elk Grove. "We've been seeing these calls for the last four months from Apple," said police dispatcher Jamie Hudson. "We're able to see quickly where the call is coming from, so when we get one from Apple, the address will come up with their location." CBS Sacramento reports: On average, Elk Grove Police say they've received 20 accidental 911 calls a day from Apple, roughly 1,600 calls since October. Hudson says the calls take valuable seconds away from calls that could be real life-and-death emergencies. "The times when it's greatly impacting us is when we have other emergencies happening and we may have a dispatcher on another 911 call that may have to put that call on hold to triage the incoming call," he said. The calls are all coming from an Apple repair and refurbishing center off Laguna Boulevard. The Sacramento County Sheriff's Department Communication Center is also getting these calls -- 47 since January 1. Dispatchers there say they sometimes hear technicians working in the background. Apple hasn't confirmed which of their devices is actually causing these calls: the iPhone or Apple watch, but both devices can be triggered easily. With just a touch of a button, SOS comes on and 911 is called.

There surely are laws about falsely calling 911 repeatedly? If so, do what the law says, fine them, throw them in jail.If a corporate citizen is a citizen, then you can put that citizen in prison where he belongs.If you need to shore up the regions finances, fine them. 50.000 dollars per false call and they will stop their shit quick.

IANAL, but I'm just guessing based on the idea that they know about the behavior and they've yet to stop it. Stopping it might require drastic steps, I dunno, point is they are knowingly allowing it to continue even if they aren't initiating the calls.

If the police inform you that a 911 call is coming from your house every day, then further calls are Knowingly, And you have a lawful duty to prevent further false calls --- even if that means you have to turn off or permanently disable
a broken phone errantly making false to accomplish that, otherwise you are Knowingly and willfully making the further violations that occur after you have been Made aware by notice.

Intentionally, knowingly, negligently, and recklessly are all key terms in law, all very well defined and they all mean different things.

If a law is supposed to mean "intentionally", they say "intentionally". "Knowingly" is distinctly different term, with a very different well-defined meaning. Knowingly means exactly what it sounds like - the person knew what was going on. "Intentionally" would mean they tried to make it happen. Reckless means with complete disregard for whether it happens, and negligen

Both imply intent and deliberate action, neither of which is going to be the case.

NOPE --- Knowingly includes INACTION or failure to prevent after you have been given notice of an ongoing, continued, or repeated inaction; it's happening 20 times a day, s othere's absolutely Zero way they could claim this is not happening knowingly.... Maybe Apple can afford the $250/Call fine and it isn't enough to justify them fixing it ----- then I would suggest they escalate the fine to $2500/Call after the n

I don't think that butt-dialing would qualify as "knowingly allowing the use".

Butt dialing once would not qualify as knowingly, BUT that excuse only works once --- if the incident repeats however After you were verifiably notified that it is occurring, then further buttdial calls after notice will be KNOWINGLY, because you know your phone is making 911 calls and failed in a duty to stop it ---- so you better make some adjustments to ensure further butt dials cannot happen, FOR EXAMPLE: Lock your

The city of San Francisco, population ~850,000, receives about 4000 911 calls every day. I've called 911 twice in my entire life, both were legit emergencies for other people.

A person living on the street ended up dying, possibly because people calling 911 on his behalf couldn't get through. So the city finally started adding more operators, changing procedures so they could transfer non-emergency calls to a different department, etc. Apparently 1/3 of calls are accidental, butt dialing, dialing 91 fro

The non-emergency police number is for all kinds of mundane things like where to drop off my old drugs, finding out when and where their self defense training is, reporting complaints, telling them about a good/bad experience you've had when dealing with the police. It's a non-emergency number and they're civil servants. I'm sure they could relay a message to the fire house.

A large percentage of the rest are people calling about non-emergency stuff. There's a homeless camp outside my house, someone broke into my car last night, my car was towed, and the like. Since you have these folks numbers how about a three strike policy. You get three strikes over two years, then you get fined $200.

On Sunday, I called the Santa Cruz police department because my car got broken into. Their voicemail system said that their phone number is for administrative calls, and that if you have an em

You can't file an insurance claim without a police report, so when something gets stolen, you do need the police to respond, even though they probably won't be able to do anything about the theft itself other than documenting it....

With the current level of fines it's $250 after 3 calls, so Apple's 20 bogus calls a day will only cost them 150,000 a month. Since that's not stopping them, either (A) They aren't being given the proper fine, or (B) Apple considers it just a cost of doing business --- not a large enough fine to justify any changes.

Thus why when the government FINES a business they oughta add a GROSS REVENUE clause. If either your annual gross in

There surely are laws about falsely calling 911 repeatedly? If so, do what the law says, fine them, throw them in jail.

What they need to do is next time a false 911 call comes in.... do a dispatch, send a team to the facility.Rope it off. Detain all persons present in the building for questioning.. Nobody may enter or leave this building, until the exact device that made the call is identified

Investigate, make sure the call was false, identify the device.

Seize the device into police custody.

Seize all similar iPhones or smart Watches present and put them into evidence.

Start interviewing witnesses in search for the person who made the false call. If no person could be found, find the highest ranking manager in control over that location and begin arraignment proceedings for false 911 calls.

So the solution to the problem is to double down on the already absurd overuse of police force that the USA suffers from, opening them up to lawsuits from a very wealthy company in the process?

They're not subject to being sued, because police have the power to take actions to stop life-threatening crimes from action, AND criminal actions trump civil actions, so by having a criminal action any attempts to sue them will be rejected or thrown out of court until the criminal actions are resolved.

Not Gitmo.... but I agree the fact that traditionally replaceable commodity parts, especially consumables are permanently installed --- should be considered a deliberate design defect AKA intentionally built to fail, AND Apple should be required to compensate consumers for the additional costs; for example if you purchase a new NVMe, then Apple should be required to install the module free of charge, including performing all necessary solder work, and warranting that work for an unlimited time period.

My phone used to call 911 at least once a month. The problem was that the it would turn on by pushing the home button, which was very easy to do when you put your phone in your pocket. Then just by sliding up on the screen it will open up a dialer and it will only dial emergency numbers without being unlocked. And apparently 911 is easy to dial. I didn't have a phone case, but most of them did not cover up the home key in any way. My older Android phone allowed a configuration to allow/disallow using h

Yes, a heavy-handed prosecution for an unintentional hardware problem would be a big win for corporate responsibility here. Likely outcome:

"We sincerely and deeply apologize for the unintended 911 calls. Here is a check for the fine.Can you please provide some additional traffic control at our facility this Saturday? We are moving the repair center and its 500 jobs to Mexico and the moving trucks may cause a bit of a traffic jam. Thanks."

If only Apple had enough money to pay the 911 service to employ a couple of extra dispatchers as compensation for dealing with their nuisance calls.

Apple has tons of money . . . but unfortunately, it's all stored in a byzantine maze of foreign bank accounts and shell companies . . . all safely away from the prying eyes, and greedy, grubby hands of the IRS.

The 911 calls are probably from a disgruntled worker looking for a break from work when the cops show up, or just looking for cheap shits and giggles, just like any swatter.

The cops should use the Kansas Hard Guy Engagement Plan and just shoot whoever opens the door at Apple. The resulting furor wo

We've been saying ever since the iPhone 6 came out that putting the power button directly across from the volume buttons made it hard to turn off the phone without accidentally hitting the volume buttons, which cancels out the power button press.

So what did Apple do about it? They made holding down power + either volume button call freaking 911. It seems pretty likely that they didn't run any tests beforehand to determine how often those buttons were pressed accidentally, because if they had, the entire

The iPhone8+ box is too tight. So the power button is getting partially pressed and when you move the box around, it can accidentally get pressed few times in quick succession triggering emergency call. It happened with Apple employee when I bought my phone and happened with me once at home as well.